ATTENTION HACKER: What you are doing is illegal. If you include these hidden links again, I will file a complaint with the Internet Crime Complaint Center (http://www.ic3.gov/default.htmlx) about these activities. They are an international partnership of the FBI and NW3C. I have copied the URLs that you are linking to, and will include the list of URLs in my complaint. If these are links toyour sites, then the authorities will easily find you. If people have paid you for these links, then the authorities will track the payments. This happened to me in the past, and the people who had paid for the links were very happy to cooperate with the authorities.*** NEW MESSAGE TO HACKER: If you include the links again, I will inform Google. I will go to the area where you send inquiries about PR, and supply them with the list of URLs you are illegally including. As you know, Google will then blacklist your URLs. I know that Google actively monitors these messages because they have made changes to my page rank on more than one occasion when I sent them reconsideration requests. If you continue doing what you are doing, you will only kill your page rank.

"I tested a number of TreeView components and yours was the only one with acceptable performance. You have a section on "Fast Performance" and my experience supports your claims."

— Jim Wilson, Dec 2006

Navigation is one of the most important pieces of any Web page or application.
It allows users find what they need, easily and quickly.

With a tree menu control, also called treeview, the information is displayed in
a hierarchy. Beginning users like to use a tree because it is
easy to understand, just like using Windows Explorer. Experienced users like
it because it is efficient in the number of clicks needed to find
information.

The tree menu is ideal for certain Web-based applications. We first realized
this in 1997. As web technology is evolving, so too is the treeview code.
As the script has evolved, we have maintained a high level of cross-browser
compatibility and, above all, stability.

An earlier version of this TreeView is featured in Dan Livingston's Advanced
JavaScript, Insights and Innovative Techniques book. In this book, there are
three full chapters dedicated to explaining the complexities associated with creating
a sophisticated, efficient, cross-browser tree menu. This TreeView was chosen to
feature in his book because of its robust operation and superior coding
techniques.

Also, this TreeView code
won the Spotlight Award from Dynamic <HTML> Zone Web site. This is a
real award and not one of those meaningless "five star" awards from download sites.
Again, it won for the quality of its code.

One of the advantages of this TreeView is its legacy browser support. A significant
number of users on the Web continue to use older browsers, and you cannot afford to
exclude these users from your Web site or application. You only have to look at
employers who are slow to update their computers, to see a significant number of users
you could lock out if you do not support legacy browsers. Also consider users
in developing or emerging countries who may not have the latest computers and
browsers.

Download and configure the latest version of Treeview today. We made special
efforts to make it easy for you to write the code for your tree. Compare the code
needed for our tree with the more complicated code of other treeviews and see for
yourself. Also, it is easy to install and customize to your needs. We hope you
enjoy!